Showing posts with label rfJBRail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rfJBRail. Show all posts

Saturday, December 17, 2022

CSX/L&N Tunnel Under Eastwood, KY

(Bridge Hunter; See below for Satellite information)

J.B. Rail Photog posted
12/15/2022 - Tunnel motors exiting out of a tunnel!  R. J. Corman Z544-15 exits out of the south end of the tunnel at Eastwood, KY, on the Old Road Subdivision.

Dennis DeBruler commented on JB's post
A former L&N route.
https://www.google.com/maps/@38.2334898,-85.4511776,920m/data=!3m1!1e3?hl=en
 
J.B. Rail Photog posted
11/09/2023 - R. J. Corman Z546 comes out of the east end of the Eastwood Tunnel in Eastwood, KY, on the Old Road Subdivision.

Note the two "ears" that have been carved into the top of the tunnel to create clearance for double-stack container trains.
Photo by J.P. via BridgeHunter

A topo map made it easy to find the tunnel.
1951 Fisherville Quad @ 24,000

J.B. Rail Photog posted
12/28/2022 - R. J. Corman Z546 led by GMTX 9014 (formerly a NYSW leaser) northbound on the Old Road Subdivision in Eastwood, KY.
J.B. Rail Photog shared
Dennis DeBruler shared

J.B. Rail Photog posted
05/06/2023 - CSX P001-06 slowly moves through the tunnel in Eastwood, KY, with CSXT 1,2, and 3 leading the "Derby Train" on the Old Road Subdivision northbound which is normally on R. J. Corman trains but on this day VIPs are brought via train to Louisville, KY, where they will experience the Kentucky Derby wined and dined on the way and at the track.


Friday, July 16, 2021

1962,1997,2011+12 I-64 Sherman Minton Bridge over Ohio River at New Albany, IN

(Bridge Hunter; B&TSatellite)

"Built 1961; rehabilitated 1997 and 2011/12; closed on September 9, 2011 due to cracks in the main load-bearing structural element; reopened on February 17/18, 2012" [Bridge Hunter] 

SMR-2018

A.J. Bertin posted three photos with the comment: "From September 2020, here are a few photos I took of the bridge that carries I-64 over the Ohio River... New Albany, Indiana."
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It opened in Aug 1962, a year before the I-65 bridge opened. It has two decks of 3 lanes each that now carry 70,000 vehicles/day. The arch span is 800'. [SMR-about] (I used this source instead of the Bridge Hunter source for the completion year in the title.)

Rather than paint it while it was forced to be closed in 2011, they waited so that they can disrupt traffic for a couple of years with lane closures and have to remove even more rust. Actually, they are rehabilitating the bridge, not just painting it, to add 30 years of life to the bridge. [SMR-project]
Street View, May 2019

I learned of this bridge while reading about the crack in the I-40 bridge at Memphis, TN. Someone commented that this bridge had a similar double-arch design and that it also was closed because of a crack.
A Bridge Hunter comment

The Sherman Minton Bridge episode might prove instructive. It was ordered closed Sept. 9, 2011, after cracks were found in its main load-bearing structural element. The crack was repaired by Sept. 23, but an inspection of the rest of the bridge uncovered additional cracks. The repairs cost $20 million. The bridge reopened Feb. 17, 2012.
The Federal Highway Administration issued its technical advisory two days after the Sherman Minton Bridge was closed. It blamed the cracks on improper fabrication procedures as well as the grade of steel used.
"Several cracks were found in the butt welds or their associated heat-affected zones of the tension ties of both spans," the advisory said. "It was subsequently determined that the cracking was very likely caused by hydrogen that was introduced into the weld as the result of improper fabrication procedures. T-1 steel is known to be very susceptible to this type of cracking."
The I-40 bridge was also made with T-1 steel. However, ADOT says the crack is worse than those caused by welding T-1 grade steel with welding procedures that were banned in 1977. Forensic testing will be required to understand how the I-40 crack developed. [ArkansasOnline]

J.B. Rail Photog posted
07/15/2021 - Norfolk Southern train 223 with the Conrail Heritage Unit leading slowly approaches Tatum at New Albany, IN, as they head eastbound towards K&IT Junction passing up an old grain toward with the Ohio River paralleling the tracks makes for a wonderful backdrop.
[Note that this bridge is in the background.]

James Bailey, Mar 2018

On Mar 9, 2024, the bridge was shut down for an emergency inspection. [wlky] I came across this news article when I was checking out a news article about eight barges stuck at the 14th Street Bridge.

We Work the Waterways posted
Amherst Madison's M/V TENNESSEE southbound lining up for the Sherman Minton Bridge at Mile 608 on the Ohio River. 
Captain Jim Smiley (Capted Smiley) tells us it’s a nice sunny evening in Louisville, Kentucky and Jeffersonville, Indiana. 
The M/V TENNESSEE is towing for American Commercial Barge Line whose home office is in Jeffersonville.

Dec 20, 2024: Bridges & Tunnels posted seven photos with the comment:
The Sherman Minton Bridge, which carries Interstate 64 and US Route 150 over the Ohio River between Louisville, Kentucky, and New Albany, Indiana, has fully reopened after a multi-year rehabilitation.
Completed in 1962, the double-deck steel through-arch bridge was named for Sherman Minton, a New Albany native and former U.S. Senator and Supreme Court Justice.
In September 2011, inspectors discovered structural steel deficiencies and cracking linked to the original use of T1 steel, known for its susceptibility to cracking. The bridge was closed for several months for repairs before reopening in February 2012. A more extensive rehabilitation from 2021 to 2024 has extended the bridge’s lifespan by an estimated 30 years.
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Sunday, May 9, 2021

CSX/L&N Daylight/Tunnel near Glencoe, KY

(Satellite)

J.B. Rail Photog posted
04/12/2021 - CSX Q505-12 comes slowly through Eagle Cut which was once a tunnel and daylighted years ago after a partial collapse in 2005 on the CSX LCL Subdivision southbound in Glencoe, KY.

Part of the problem of digging the cut is where do you put all of that dirt and rock. It looks like they moved it north alongside another hill.
200411

200510

200607




Monday, May 3, 2021

1929 RJCC/CSX/(C&O+L&N) and 1910-2025 Road Bridges over Kentucky River in Frankfort, KY

Railroad: (Archived Bridge Hunter; Historic Bridges; B&TSatellite)
Both: (Satellite, update: the road bridge was removed in 2025) These bridges appear to share some piers.

RJCC = R J Corman Railroad - Central Kentucky Line

According to the 2005 SPV Map, C&O and L&N shared this route through Frankfort.

C Hanchey Flickr, this is the first of several photos of this bridge
Comment from comparable photo in Bridge Hunter: 1929 three span (girder, Warren and Pennsylvania) through truss railroad bridge next to Broadway Bridge (1910 Baltimore Petit truss)

Walter Laughling commented in BridgeHunter-Road:
A couple of points of correction: This is actually TWO bridges. The highway bridge carrying Broadway (and this modern affectation of calling it Broadway STREET annoys me to no end) was built in 1898 as the railroad bridge. It also had a wooden deck to allow wagons and pedestrians to use it. It replaced the first iron railroad bridge in 1898 - a Fink truss built in 1868. The Fink truss replaced the second railroad covered bridge at this location lost in a flood in 1867. The second covered bridge replaced the first covered bridge which was burned by the Confederates in 1863 during the occupation of Frankfort. The covered bridge replaced the first railroad bridge at the location which was a wire suspension bridge. 

The present railroad bridge was built in 1929.


Julie Bowers comment in Bridge Hunter-Road
The detailed map from 1871 clearly shows the Fink truss at this location. That truss was for both rail and road transportation.

B&T posted 7 more photos that include details of the deterioration
The Broadway Bridge and the connecting railroad abridge intertwine in downtown Frankfort, Kentucky.
The first crossing across the river at that site was a covered span completed. 1850 and was replaced in 1864. An iron Fink truss was completed in 1868 and replaced in 1910 with a Baltimore Petit through truss. All four of these bridges carried a combination railroad track, carriageway, and pedestrian sidewalk.
In 1929, the Louisville & Nashville Railroad completed a separate railroad bridge that was erected by the American Bridge Company. The existing c. 1910 bridge was reused and widened to carry Broadway and US Route 421 across the river. It was bypassed in 1989 with a new four-lane crossing and closed to automobile traffic in 1992. It has been closed to pedestrians for some years now because of extensive substructure and superstructure deterioration, including pier spalling and joint erosion, steel corrosion, and steel delamination.

J.B. Rail Photog posted and shared
03/19/2021 - RJCC Z543-19 creeps across the Kentucky River through Frankfort, KY, northbound on the Old Road Subdivision. I don't usually take vertical pictures of trains but this one is framed in the bridge so I thought it worked.

J.B. Rail Photog posted and shared
08/24/2020 - RJCC Z544-24 comes off the Kentucky River Bridge which crosses the Kentucky River at Broadway in Frankfort, KY. The vehicle bridge to the right has been closed for years and hopes for saving it are slim for pedestrian usage. There's also an old searchlight signal which has been inoperable for years that CSX didn't remove to the right of the locomotive in the picture which I hear is coming down very soon.
 
SteelRails posted
RJ Corman, RJCC 5361 EMD SD40T-2 Train ID Z545, leading a train loaded with aluminum ingots From Novelis Recycling Center in Berea Kentucky, known as the Alcan train crossing over the Kentucky River in Frankfort Kentucky on May 17, 2023.
https://fineartamerica.com/featured/rj-corman-rjcc-5361-emd-sd40t-2-steelrails-photography.html
 
Mntclimberjoe Rail Photography posted
The RJ Corman Kentucky Line's empty Alcan aluminum slab train crosses over the Kentucky River as it comes into Frankfort, Kentucky on a bridge that parallels an abandoned road bridge that once carried Broadway Street across the river. In the lead is the newest power to the railroad with a pair of former NS SD70M's wearing a special paint scheme for the company's 50th anniversary.
====Info====
6/5/2023
RJCC Old Road Sub
Frankfort, KY
RJCC Z544-05 (Aluminum Empties; Louisville, KY to Berea, KY)
RJCC 2023 SD70M Ex. PRLX 2608, NS 2608 Blt. 2003
RJCC 1973 SD70M Ex. PRLX 2607, NS 2607 Blt. 2003

This street view is deja vu for me, but I can't find any existing notes. I do hope this is not a duplicate.
Street View

C Hanchey Flickr

Broadway Bridge

Historic 1910 Broadway Bridge over the Kentucky River in downtown Frankfort. The bridge was the only pin-connected Baltimore truss highway bridge in Kentucky.


David Morse posted two photos with the comment:
The Frankfort KY State Journal this weekend reported the following information on the demolition of the old L&N railroad bridge over the Kentucky River at Frankfort.
Haydon Bridge Company with C.J. Mahan Construction Company submitted a bid to demolish the bridge for $16.029 million.  The Transportation Cabinet rejected the bid because it was 192.34% higher than engineers' estimate pf $5.483 million to do the job.
When a bid is accepted the winner will have 30 calendar days to remove the bridge.and get the river reopened to river traffic, 45 calendar days to reopen that part of River View Park, and 120 calendar days to overall project completion.
The following conditions must be met.
The truss must not be disassembled as plans are to use it for a future pedestrian bridge over the river.  It is estimated the truss, with the concrete deck, sidewalk, and sidewalk supports removed, weighs 260.000 pounds,
The truss is not to be stored on the river bank.
As the bridge is alongside the active railroad bridge built to replace it, all documents must be submitted to George Zimmermean with the RJ Corman Railroad Company for review,
As both bridges share pier 4 the contractor must an entry permit before getting on the property
During the October 5 Bourbon On The Banks Festival, the contractor is not allowed in River View Park during the festival and no equipment is allowed on the park trail.
KYTC has allocated $3.5 million and the City Of Frankfort has allocated up to $2 million for the pedestrian bridge which is to be built,  The new pedestrian bridge is planned to be built slightly downstream from the current bridge and incorporate the truss from the old bridge.  This will make and interesting place to take photos of Corman crossing the current bridge.
Attached are two photos of the bridge with Corman MOW trains crossing on the active railroad bridge behind it.  The pier on the left is pier 4, the shared pier,  There is reason to believe the two cut stone piers are on footers made of loge.
David Hume: David , I am pretty sure the Broadway pier goes back to the 1830’s as I have records from the Frankfort Bridge Company and their agreement with the Lexington and Ohio Rail Road to build the bridge , with receipts for construction of piers .
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April 2025 Flood:
Facebook Reel, Apr 22, 2025

Craig Blanton posted 0:45 video
Downtown Frankfort, Ky. Federal Railroad
Administration.
Not something you see every day coming through Frankfort
They came from Louisville through Franklin County to who knows where. There was a strange arcing sound as this went by. Maybe it was the air brakes??? Give me a follow for more cool videos like this one.
Louisville & Nashville Railroad Historical Society shared
FRA inspection train through Frankfort, Kentucky on the former L&N today.

Jun 2025:
Bridges & Tunnels posted six photos with the comment:
On a rainy day in Frankfort, I joined transportation engineer Todd Wilson to tour the Kentucky River valley’s historic bridges and tunnels. Among our stops were the Broadway Bridge and the Frankfort Railroad Bridge—two structures that reflect over a century of engineering and the evolving story of Kentucky’s capital.
📸 More photos and narrative in our latest Journal post: https://bridgestunnels.com/.../documenting-two-of.../
Abandoned shared
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Lexington Railroading posted four photos with the comment: "Started taking down the old L&N bridge in Frankfort today.  In the first photo sparks from the cutting torch can be seen.  Adding this to clear up confusion.  The bridge being demolished was built by the L&N as a joint road/rail bridge.  Trains got heavier and a replacement was needed.  In 1929 the L&N opened the current active RR bridge. The old bridge was given to the city and was later widened.  The old bridge and the current RR bridge are separate structures."
Dave Withers
As far as I can tell, the 1910 Broadway Bridge, which has been closed to car traffic since 1993, is being taken down. The 1929 L&N/RJ Corman railroad bridge, which is adjacent, will remain. But I’ll stand corrected!
Franki Cov shared
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Bridges & Tunnels posted seven photos with the comment:
The Broadway Bridge and the connecting railroad abridge intertwine in downtown Frankfort, Kentucky.
The first crossing across the river at that site was a covered span completed. 1850 and was replaced in 1864. An iron Fink truss was completed in 1868 and replaced in 1910 with a Baltimore Petit through truss. All four of these bridges carried a combination railroad track, carriageway, and pedestrian sidewalk.
In 1929, the Louisville & Nashville Railroad completed a separate railroad bridge that was erected by the American Bridge Company. The existing c. 1910 bridge was reused and widened to carry Broadway and US Route 421 across the river. It was bypassed in 1989 with a new four-lane crossing and closed to automobile traffic in 1992. It has been closed to pedestrians for some years now because of extensive substructure and superstructure deterioration, including pier spalling and joint erosion, steel corrosion, and steel delamination.
➤ Check out more photos of these bridges at http://bridgestunnels.com/loc.../broadway-bridge-old-us-421/ and http://bridgestunnels.com/loca.../frankfort-railroad-bridge/ [These are the same as links recorded above.]
Bridges & Tunnels by Sherman Cahal shared with the comment: "This abandoned roadway bridge in Franklin County was demolished last year [posted 2026]."
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Wow, a satellite image is recent enough to show the bridge missing.
Satellite

Facebook Reel
[This video made me a little seasick. It does include a couple of barrel views.]